2 resultados para Mineral deposit
em Universidad Politécnica de Madrid
Resumo:
El proyecto tiene como objeto definir la viabilidad de explotación de un importante yacimiento de Estaño y Tántalo que se encuentra en una formación geológica de base pegmatítica situada en el norte de España. En base a las reservas calculadas, se define la capacidad de tratamiento de la planta de procesamiento del mineral para un periodo de explotación de 10 años. Como primer paso se estudian los ensayos de caracterización y concentración realizados en laboratorio a partir de muestras de mano representativas del mineral así como otros en planta piloto llevados a cabo anteriormente. Una vez definida la recuperación del Estaño y Tántalo se procede al diseño conceptual del proceso. Posteriormente se desarrolla un diseño e ingeniería preliminar más aproximados, a partir de los cuales se evalúan los costes de equipos y operacionales que, en base a los retornos por la venta de los concentrados, permitirán calcular la rentabilidad del proyecto y riesgos de la inversión. ABSTRACT The purpose of this project is to define the feasibility of mining a major deposit of tin and tantalum found in a pegmatite formation in northern Spain. Based on the estimated reserves, the operating capacity for mining and mineral processing plant was defined for a period of 10 years. As a first step for the development, a research program for characterization and concentration of the ore, were performed in the laboratory based on representative samples from the deposit. In addition, previous pilot plant results were also taken into account. Once determined the recovery of tin and tantalum, the conceptual design process was defined. As a second step, it was developed a preliminary design and engineering, from which the capital and operating costs were estimated .By means of the calculated returns from the sale of concentrates, the profitability of the project and investment risks were finally assessed
Resumo:
Se investiga la compleja mineralogía del Yacimiento de Pallancata (6º productor de plata del mundo) y se establecen las condiciones de formación (P.T) basadas en la petrología de las menas comparada con los datos de mineralogía experimental y en la petrografía y microtermometría de inclusiones fluídas en la ganga silicatada, resultando un depósito típicamente caracterizado como epitermal de sulfuración intermedia.ABSTRACT:Pallancata is a world-class intermediate-sulfidation epithermal deposit, hosted by upper Miocene volcanics of the south-central Peruvian Andes in a sinuous N70ºW, ∼75º SW strike-slip structure, with wide (up to 35 m) pull-apart dilation zones related to bends of the vein strike. The structural evolution of the vein from earlier brecciation to later open space infill resembles the Shila Paula district (Chauvet et al. 2006). Fluid inclusion petrography and microthermometry show that ore deposition is related to protracted boiling of very diluted, mainly meteoric fluids, starting at 250–260 ºC, under ∼300 m hydrostatic head. The mineralogical-petrological study reveals a complex sequence of mineralization (eight stages) and mineral reactions consistent with Ag2S enrichment or Sb2S3 depletion, or both, during cooling over the temperature range 250–200 ºC: pyrite, sphalerite, galena, miargyrite, pyrargyrite-proustite, chalcopyrite, polybasite-pearceite, argentite (now acanthite), and Au–Ag alloy (“electrum”). This Ag2S enrichment and Sb2S3depletion during cooling may be explained by decay of a Ag-rich galena precursor at deeper levels (Pb2S2–AgSbS2 solid solution), which rapidly becomes unstable with decreasing temperature, producing residual (stoichiometric) PbS and more mobile Ag and Sb sulfide phases, which migrated upward and laterally away from the thermal core of the system. The core is still undisclosed by mining works, but the available geochemical evidence (logAg/log Pb ratios decreasing at depth) is consistent with this interpretation, implying a deeper potential resource. Data from sulfide geothermometry, based on mineral equilibria, document the thermal evolution of the system below 200 ºC (stephanite, uytenbogaardtite, jalpaite, stromeyerite, mckinstryite, among others). The end of the most productive stages (3, 4, and 5) is marked by the precipitation of stephanite at temperatures below 197 ± 5 ºC, but precipitation of residual silver continues through the waning stages of the hydrothermal system down to <93.3 ºC (stromeyerite) or in a supergene redistribution (stage 8, acanthite II).